I suspect that you could openly tell everyone that the groups are randomly assigned, if the grouping has some inertia to it—that is, if your being in the same group as someone today is a moderately strong predictor of your being in the same group as them again tomorrow.
Yeah, you’d want to be open about it, probably even emphasize it. We could even give personality descriptions based on these explicitly random groups, providing a bonus rationality lesson! (“Hey, that does sound like me!”)
I suspect that you could openly tell everyone that the groups are randomly assigned, if the grouping has some inertia to it—that is, if your being in the same group as someone today is a moderately strong predictor of your being in the same group as them again tomorrow.
Yeah, you’d want to be open about it, probably even emphasize it. We could even give personality descriptions based on these explicitly random groups, providing a bonus rationality lesson! (“Hey, that does sound like me!”)
The hard part, of course, is getting people to disbelieve once they notice that it seems to work.
Hah, yeah, we don’t want to start an accidental cult or anything. Maybe, as you suggest, switching their groups randomly on occasion would help? :)